NAHW, that's easy: ls|wc -l Or I could, (couldn't I) find . -type f|wc -l There are other tricks, like: du -a|wc -l Etc, etc, etc... There are also implications of depth, whether I want only files, and on, and on, and on... I'll keep it easy: It is a directory that only contains files. So, you'd say: what's wrong with "ls|wc -l" ? Well, here is the catch: There are almost a million files in that directory. And it gets worse: This count has to be placed in a loop in a shell script to report a second-to-second delta. The truth is that find takes some 3 seconds to do the count. What about ls without sorting? That was almost 15 seconds. Now, directories are files. It would be great if I could "count lines" on that file or somehow interrogate it "how many lines do you have?" without actually hitting the filesystem for the count. I'm considering writing a little C utility to do just that, but... "struct stat" (my first shot) doesn't contain that information either. Finally, the question is: Is there a utility that would tell me QUICK a file count under a directory (regardless of type)? And if not, are there C/C++ system calls that would tell me that? Thanks everyone! :) Enrique A. Troconis --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss